Classic ASP and ASP.Net 2.0 Guide

Specs and Version History of Microsoft Active Server Pages

© Barb Mosher

Microsoft started developing technologies long before the internet became a household icon. Its desire to conquer the internet came in the form of Active Server Pages.

When the web took off Microsoft was probably urgently trying to figure out how to take advantage of it and lead the wave. What they came up with was a technology called Active Server Pages or ASP. First released in December 1996, ASP has been through some major changes. It has grown and adapted to the new way of developing web sites and applications for the internet.

There have been two major forms of ASP: classic (or traditional) ASP and ASP.Net. Each of these has had several version releases over the years.

Each version has improved the technology to some extent; some more than others.

ASP (classic or traditional ASP)

This was the first version of ASP to appear. It was a scripting engine used to create dynamic web pages (instead of static html or CGI scripting). The version changes all came with the new versions of Microsoft's Web Server IIS. Some of the characteristics of ASP included:

ASP.Net

With the emergence of the .Net framework came a new version of ASP called ASP.Net. No longer an interpreted scripting technology, it was now object oriented and developed using full blown languages (like VB.Net and C#).

The biggest changes in the ASP.Net releases came between 1.1 and 2.0 and along with the ASP technology some big changes with the integrated development environment (IDE) Visual Studio. It’s difficult to describe the changes to ASP.Net without including the changes to the IDE.

ASP.Net 1.1

ASP.Net 2.0 (the latest incarnation)

This version has greatly improved on the previous version in many ways. But it’s more than simply an upgraded programming model – it’s a completely new approach to designing and developing web sites and applications. It has a greater learning curve than one might think.

This overview of ASP and ASP.Net has just scratched the surface of the Microsoft Active Server Page technology, which has improved dramatically in 10 years and will continue to improve.

Microsoft does, on occasion, offer free online training modules to help people get up to speed with their technologies. To say they’ve come a long way with their web development technologies is an understatement. To say they have taken the web by storm and are leading the wave – well that’s another story to be argued fiercely by the Open Source and Java communities.


The copyright of the article Classic ASP and ASP.Net 2.0 Guide in Webmaster Resources is owned by Barb Mosher. Permission to republish Classic ASP and ASP.Net 2.0 Guide must be granted by the author in writing.




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